Boiling Memories: Thermal Waters as Nexus of Trauma and Community Agency in Draginovo’s Mnemonic Waterscape
In 1971, the Bulgarian Socialist government destroyed the cemetery of a Pomak village and built a public bath on its place.
In 1971, the Bulgarian Socialist government destroyed the cemetery of a Pomak village and built a public bath on its place.
A brief examination of how Rugendas’s artwork contributes to an understanding of the network of human and nonhuman animals in nineteenth-century Brazilian society.
In 1783, strong earthquakes shook Calabria. These events, in combination with a dry sulfuric fog, led contemporaries to believe they lived in the time of a “subsurface revolution.”
A noxious air forces Mexico City to confront its unwavering urbanizing and industrializing mission in the late twentieth century.
Beyond the 1907 Huia-extinction signposts, many voices, never silent, call for hearing as well as justice toward mending relations.
This case study reflects China’s environmental governance as a constantly evolving structure within the “environment-politics-society” nexus.
An enduring legacy of the antinuclear movement is its construction of a narrative connecting human survival to nature’s beneficence.
An east-coast beachfront neighborhood faces a difficult decision about how to respond to storms and rising seas.
How Australian historical documents resolved questions about an unusual merganser specimen from Korea at the American Museum of Natural History.